International Community Has Abandoned Syrian Refugees, Report Charges
Syrian refugees have been abandoned by the international community, which has taken in only a “pitiful” number of them, humanitarian group Amnesty International charged in a report Friday.
Five countries—Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Iraq—are home to 95 percent of Syria’s more than 3 million registered refugees. Lebanon, which has a population of 4.5 million, has taken in the largest number of refugees, roughly 1.14 million, making one in every five people a Syrian refugee. Outside of those countries, Sweden has received the largest number of Syrian asylum applications and pledged 1,200 resettlement places, the report says.
“One of the most urgent issues is resettlement of refugees from the five main host countries, but internationally the number of resettlement places on offer is shamefully low,” the report, titled Left Out in the Cold, says.
Ten million people, or 45 percent of the Syrian population, have been forced from their homes due to the ongoing three-year conflict between President Bashar al-Assad and opposition fighters, according to Amnesty. The more recent addition of the conflict involving extremists from the Islamic State, who are seeking to establish a “caliphate”—a political-religious state—across swaths of northern Iraq and Syria, has worsened the situation for civilians.
More than 191,369 people have been killed in Syria since fighting began in 2011; 2,165 of them were 9-years-old or younger.
The report comes days after the World Food Program, a United Nations food aid organization, was forced to suspend a voucher program that has fed more than 1.7 million Syrian refugees due to lack of funding, despite winter fast approaching. A 72-hour fundraising campaign launched on December 3 brought in $21.5 million for Syrian refugees, the World Food Program said Thursday. The campaign is still ongoing.
Amnesty International is calling for 380,000 resettlement places to be offered globally, an increase on the current total global number of 63,170 resettlement places outside of the five main host countries that have been offered since 2011. More at Newsweek
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